- Which social hierarchies are involved in shaping the consciousness of the individual or group you are considering? How do the positions of the individual or group in those hierarchies confer overlapping or conflicting dominant or subordinate status in US society?
2. What evidence or examples, if any, do you see of specific awareness, identities, and activism on the part of the individual or group based on their intersectionality?
168 :: SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY IN THE CONTEMPORARY ERA
Figure 3.5 Collins’s Basic Concepts and Theoretical Orientation
Nonrational
Self-defined Cultural context
standpoint
Shared angles of
vision
Individual Collective
Interests Hierarchical
power relations
Institutions
Rational
Reading –
Introduction to Black Feminist Thought
In the following selection from Collins’s most highly acclaimed book, Black Feminist
Thought, Collins exposes and discusses the tension for black womei’t as agents of knowl
edge, acknowledging that “Black culture and many of its traditions oppress women”
(Collins 1990/2000:230). However, she also warns against portraying black women
either “solely as passive, unfortunate recipients of racial and sexual abuses” or as “heroic
figures who easily engage in resisting oppression” (ibid.:238). In sum, Collins continually
emphasizes the complexity of systems of both domination and resistance.
Black Feminist Thought (1990)
Patricia Hill Collins
DISTINGUISHING FEATURES Rather than developing definitions and argu
ing over naming practices-for example, whether OF BLACK FEMINIST THOUGHT
this thought should be called Black feminism,
womanism, Afrocentric feminism, Africana •Widely used yet increasingly difficult to define,
womanism, and the like-a more useful approach U.S. Black feminist thought encompasses diverse
lies in revisiting the reasons why Black feminist and often contradictory meanings ….
SOURCE: Excerpts from Black Feminist Thought by Patricia Hill Collins. Copyright© 2000 by Taylor & Francis ..
Group LLC. Reproduced with permission ofTaylor & Francis Group, LLC via Copyright Clearance Center.
. thought exists i
features that ct
may provide
sorely needed
women, and b(
and all others
thought has a
thought’s disti
unique and ma;
knowledge. Rai
distinguishing
feminist thougl
Why U.S. Blac
Black femir
U.S. Black won
As a collectivit
in a dialecticc
American won
Dialectical rela
two parties are ,
Black women’s
oppressions of 1
nation persists,
response to that
In a similar
of U.S. Black J
oppression, botl
justify it. If inte1
Black feminist
knowledges wo
social theory, 1
empower Afric1
context of socia
ing oppressions
fully empowerei
themselves are e
supports broad
transcend U.S.
I
Because son
been filtered thr
text, its contour
the specificity
(Takaki 1993). I
thought and prB
contradiction of
democratic pro
equality under
made to all Am,
µght exists at all. Exploring six distinguishing
#fies that characterize Blackfeminist thought
provide the common ground that is go
ly needed both among African’.”Ainerican
d 6n, and between African-American women
4/alJ•.··others :whose ·collettive .. k:nowledge or
‘;µgb..t has a similar. purpose. Black feminist
‘ijghfs distinguishing features need not be
1′”he :and may share much with other bodies of
: ledge; Rather, it is the convergence of these
j~guishing features that gives U.S. Black
· \st thought its distinctive contours.
‘i”U.s. Black Ferninist Thought?
. ,_;_;-~· ‘ . ‘ . . . . . .
Jack. feminism remains important because
;J3latk women constitute an oppressed group.
a:coilectivity, U.S1 Black women participate
‘});Jialecfical relationship linking African-
‘ht!)Il. women’s oppression and activism.
~~tjcal relationships of this sort mean /hat
parties are opposed and opposite. As long as
.kwomen’s subordination within intersecting
i’issions of race,: class, gender, sexuality, and
fo,n. persists, Black feminism· as an activist
p9pse to that oppression will remain needed.
‘:fii’a $im.ilar fashion, .the overarching purpose
\s. Black feminist thought is aiso to resist
pt~ssion, both its practices and the ideas that
ftfy it. If intersecting’ oppressions. did not exist,
l.lqk feminist thought and similar oppositional
o\vledges.would be unnecessary. As a critical
Jal’,theozy; Black feminist ,tho:ught aims to
p6wer Africans.American Women within the
.~text of social injustice.sustained by intersect~
gt.~ppressions. Since Black women cannot be
liy empowered unless• intersecting oppressions
~fuselves .are eliminated, Black feminist thought
ppprts. broad principles of -social justice that
pscend U.S. Black women’s particular needs.
t;Because so much ofU.S. Black.feminism has
, f~n filtered through the prism of the U.S. con
‘.t~J(t; its c.ontours have been greatly affected by
~thffspecificity of American· multiculturaHsm
:ttl1kaki 1993). In particular, U.S. Black feminist
t4:~1:ight·.and practice respond to a fundamental
‘£\5~tradiction ofUS; society. On the. one hand,
. ~rnocratic promises of individual. freedom,
\i:ality under the law, and social .justice are
.~de to all American citizens. Yet on th,e other
Critical Theory GB 169
hand; the reality of differential group ,treatment
based ot). race, class, gender, sexuality, and citi
zenship status persists. Groups organized around
race,·. class, and· gender in and of themselves are
not inherently a problem, However, when African
.Americans, poor people, women, and other groups
discriminated . against .• see little hope for group
based advancement, this situation constitutes
social injustice ..
Within this oyerarching contradiction, U.S.
Blackwomen encounter a, distinctive set of social
practices .that accompany· our particular history
· within a UJJ.jque matrix of domination character- 170 1: SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY IN THE CONTEMPORARY ERA
Although racial segregation is now organized African-American
women to certain common experiences. U.S. A recognition of this connection between Watching God, from obedient granddaughter and Overall, these ties between what one does and The presence of Black women’s collective Historically, Black women’s group location iii among individua African-American Diverse Respom A second distin agree on the signiJ Despite differen ,brig .individual African-American women. At {i(‘cha:ve and· any ensuing group consdoushess ‘¢fseRespons~s ‘to Common \s~cond distinguishing feature ofU.S, Black ptically and routinely derogates women of :;~ii’6ifthat individual African~American women challenges confronting U.S. Black women . , ‘es characterize U.S. Black women’s group )?s,and public treatment and hide this differen its, and sexuality. These common challenges ,,:can~American women from quite diverse (~cl experience being followed in a store as a
Critical Theory :: 171
potential· shoplifter, ignored while · others are · Since standpoints refer to group knowledge, ized the Bla:ckwonian’s reality as a situation of Despite differences ·created· by historical era, I would beg .• , . to· add my plea fodhe Colored Yet during this period Cooper and other middle Stating that a legacy· of struggle exists does https://Jt)espi.te 172 llli! SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY IN THE CONTEMPORARY ERA
African-American girls, age often offers little This legacy of struggle constitutes one of Despite the common challenges confronting By deconstructing the conceptual apparatus of the Many factors explain these diverse responses. while it shru Sexuality, have identifa Given hov I ‘bile it shares much with middle-class Black ~ character (Fordham 1993). .. \ie identified heterdsexism as a form· ofoppres~ {9$4r’Clarke et at 1983; Barbara Smith 1983, ending . the wedding saw only· a·. festive :event, ing ethnic and citizenship Statuses wi.thin the ,?19,ng.Black womenin the United States.>For tl iilBlack woman wb,ose experiences stand as J:nen in , search of . an elusive group . unity. . )ack,women s collective standpoint does exist, J{ heterogeneity in crafting Black women’s )ihdpoint eschews essentialism in favor of
· Critical Theory DI 173
democracy. Since Blackfeminist thought both Moreover in thinking through the contqurs of The version of Black.feminism that U.S. 174 Ill SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY IN THE CONTEMPORARY ERA
practice in a transnational, Black diasporic con Black Feminist Practice A third distinguishing feature of Black femi As members of an oppressed group, U.S. U.S. Black feminism itself illustrates this dia Given the history of U.S. racial segregation, As critical social theory, Black feminist Within these parameters, knowledge for cope with, and resh the institutionalize The potential si: Black feminist pra selves and our world Dialogical Practi<
and Black Women
A fourth distingu ti:/ . ‘ ‘,. ‘
/Gpe\vith, and resist our differential treatment It Xatso reasonable to qtrestion·the.valid1ty of Jii~n ‘operated. as a mechanism· of social .con~ ~r~fld prilllarily in agriculture and servic~, ‘ , connections could be drawn between. the }riipQrtant issues in Black women’s Hves.. eric~n women about the dimerisfons ofa Black ·. tertiinist thought can stimulate .a new. cori ?plic a consciousness that quite often already iiess aiins to. empower African-American :/’6gical Practices ‘}ourth distinguishing feature of Black femi~ Critic~! Theory l:l 175
of African•Anierican women intellectuals.The munity.ofA:frican-Anie1can women; arelation Tbis. special i:elation~hip ~f Black women Experts or specialists who participate .in and https://which_.it https://appropri1:1.te 176 :: SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY IN THE CONTEMPORARY ERA
Because they have had greater opportunities It is important to recognize that black women The work of these women is important Black Feminism as A fifth distinguishing feature of U.S. Black operate effectively within Black feminism as a The changing social conditions that confront low-paid jobs at fa tier sector, or the tei The changing c Black women’s sti alone, as was the c The visibility .Criti¢al Theory iii 177
)ow~paid jobs at fast-food. establishments, ni.rrs~ }aries and clerical workers of the primary lower /kii<.i admin.istrators of the priniary uppe; tier
!Jecfor--,-c.U;S. Black women still do a remarkable
t/)hareofthe emotional nurturing and cleaning up i90.111p1~maliti~s are eIDJerj~11ced di.ff~rep.tly. .·. . ·•1n1eanith.~t Blackwonien intellectuals have tradi •. Blars,.writers, an,d artists.ha:ve .worked either , “hi11 Attican~American conununify • orgatiiza~ iiij}c:qfporation ofwork on Biack.women into cur~ . ~t}Bl~ct ‘Yow111 ilitelJepttl~~ ·.. can now .find .· yd.ia,remaitls unprecedented, as talk show host :?l~9§,.andfotlly~• int6film·production··sugge~t to separate . thought from action-:–particularly U.S. B{ackFeminism A final . disting1#sliing foatute .of Blackfemi …. .
We take our stand on the solidarityHhumanity, Like Cooper,· manyAfrican~American women https://rik,J:s.wa 178 Im SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY IN THE CONTEMPORARY ERA
of particular political solutions we propose, our one important guiding principle of Black femi ist vision in U.S. Black feminist thought is offered Peter M. Blau
ized by intersecting oppressions;:Race is far from
being the only significant marker of gro:up differ
ence-,-dass, gender,, se~uality,religion; and citi
zenship statu!l allmatter,gready· in·the
differently than in prior eras (Collins 1998a,
11-43), being Black and female in the United
States continues to expose
Black women’s similar work and family experi
ences as well as our participation in diverse
expressions of African-American culture mean
that, overall, U.S. Black women as a group live in
a different world from that of people who are not
Black and female. For individual women, the par
ticular experiences that accrue to living as a Black
woman in the United States can stimulate a dis
tinctive consciousness concerning our own experi
ences and society overall. Many African-American
women grasp this connection between what one
does and how one thinks. Hannah Nelson, an
elderly Black domestic worker, discusses how
work shapes the perspectives ofAfrican-American
and White women: “Since I have to work, I don’t
really have to worry about most of the things that
most of the white women I have worked for are
worrying about. And ifthese women did their own
work, they would think just like I do-about this,
anyway” (Gwaltney 1980, 4). Ruth Shays, a Black
inner-city resident, points out how variations in
men’s and women’s experiences lead to differ
ences in perspective. “The mind of the man and
the mind of the woman is the same” she notes,
“but this business of living makes women use
their minds in ways that men don’t even have to
think about” (Gwaltney 1980, 33).
experience and consciousness that shapes the
everyday lives of individual African-American
women often pervades the works of Black
women activists and scholars. In her autobiogra
phy, Ida B. Wells-Barnett describes how the
lynching of her friends had such an impact on
her worldview that she subsequently devoted
much of her life to the anti-lynching cause
(Duster 1970). Sociologist Joyce Ladner’s dis
comfort with the disparity between the teachings
of mainstream scholarship and her experiences
as a young Black woman in the South led her to
write Tomorrow’s ‘Tomorrow (1972), a ground
breaking study of Black female adolescence.
Similarly, the transformed consciousness experi
enced by Janie, the light-skinned heroine ofZora
Neale Hurston’s (1937) classic Their Eyes Were
wife to a self-defined African-American woman,
can be directly traced to her experiences with
each of her three husbands. In one scene Janie’s
second husband, angry because she served him a
dinner of scorched rice, underdone fish, and
soggy bread, hits her. That incident stimulates
Janie to stand “where he left her for unmeasured
time” and think. And in her thinking “her image
of Jody tumbled down and shattered…. [S]he
had an inside and an outside now and suddenly
she knew how not to mix them” (p. 63).
what one thinks illustrated by individual Black
women can also characterize Black women’s
experiences and ideas as a group. Historically,
racial segregation in housing, education, and
employment fostered· group commonalities that
encouraged the formation: of a group-based, col
lective standpoint. For example, the heavy con
centration of U.S. Black women in domestic
work coupled with racial segregation in housing
and schools meant that U.S. Black women had
common organizational networks . that enabled
them to share experiences and construct a collec
tive body of wisdom. This collective wisdom on
how to survive as U.S. Black women constituted a
distinctive Black women’s standpoint on gender
specific patterns of racial segregation and its
accompanying economic penalties.
wisdom challenges two prevailing interpreta
tions of the consciousness of oppressed groups.
One approach claims that subordinate groups
identify with the powerful and have no valid
independent interpretation of their own oppress
sion. The second assumes the oppressed are less
human than their rulers, and are therefore less
capable of interpreting their own experiences
(Rollins 1985; Scott 1985). Both approaches see.
any independent consciousness expressed by
African-American women and other oppressed
groups as being either not of our own making or
inferior to that of dominant groups. More impor
tantly, both explanations suggest that the alleged
lack ofpolitical activism on the part ofoppressed
groups stems from our flawed consciousness of
our own subordination.
intersecting oppressions produced commonalities :., .•,!ce,c>F••’·’·’
the same time, ~
predispose Black
group consciousn
such a consciou:
women nor that it
group. As historic
links amongthety
will have and an:
concerning those
standpoints are sit
unjust power rela
(Collins 1998a, :
lenges may foster
to a group kno1
Challenges With
feminist thought e
experiences and
African-American
lenges that result
historically and n
African descent. :C
women face com
means that individ
have all had the E
ences. Thus, on thl
mon challenges cc
as a group, dive:
themes characteriz
knowledge or stanc
social class, regio
women encounter
us to inferior hom
jobs, and public tre
tial consideration ·
beliefs about Blac1
habits, and sexuali1
in tum result in rec1
for individual gro
African-American
backgrounds reporl
Not every individt
need experience be
t~a:me· time, while common ·experiences• may
~spose Black women to develop a distinctive
Jp consciousness, they guarantee neither. that
:h ‘a •consciousness will· . develop ·a:mong. ·. all
Jhen nor thatit will be articulated as such by the
‘iip. As historical cbnditions change, so do the
\among the types ofexperiences Blackwoinen
‘~c’eriting those experiences. Because group
· · ‘ points are situated in, reflect,· and help shape·
h~t power, relations; standpoints are not· static
jlins 1998a, 201-‘-28). Thus; common dial~
‘es may foster similar angles of vision leading
‘a/group knowledge or standpoint among
‘.can-American women. Or they may not. ,
‘ifknges Within IJ!ack Feminism
)iist thought enierges f.rom a tension linking
‘~riences and ideas. On the one hand, all
i~an~American women face similar chal~
esthat··result from· living in a society that
}an descent. Despite the fact that U.S. Black
il:ieti face common challenges, this neither
19:tl'”all had the same experiences nor that we
~e~ on the significance of our varying experi
~~es. Thus, on the other hand, despite the com
, ‘group, diverse · responses to these core
‘~’\\’ledge ot standpoint.
Jt)espi.te differences ofage, sexual orientation,
‘9ialclass, region, and )religion; U.S. Black
§’then, encounter societal practices that· restrict
CJ~ •inferior housing, neighborhoods, schools,
~F,col:J.sideration behind an array of common
‘ifefsabout Black women’s intelligence, work
. . •· result in recurring patterns· of experiences
Sfodividual group members; For example,
‘6kgrounds report similar treatment in stores.
:f,every ·individual Black woman consumer
waited on first, or seated near restaurant kitchens
and rest rooms, for African:cAmerican women as
a collectivity t6 recognize that differential group
treatment is operating.
recwring patterns of differential treatment such
as these stiggestthat certain themes will charac~
terize U.S.’Black women’s group knowledge or
standpoint. , For example, one· core theme con~
cems multifaceted legacies ofstruggle; especially
in response to forms· of violence that accompany
intersecting oppressions· (Cbllins 1998d).··Katie
Cannon observes,· ”[T]htoughout··the· history of
the United States, the interrelationship of white
supremacy and maJe. superiority has . character0
struggle-“-a struggle to survive in ~o contradic
tory Worlds simultaneously, one white; privi
leged; and oppressive, the other black, exploited,
and oppressed” (1985, 30). Blackwomen;s yul
nerability to• assaults .iti the .. workplace, ·· on · the
street; at home; and in media representations has
been one facfot fostering this legacy of struggle.
age, social class, sexual orientation, skin color, or
ethnicity, the legacy of struggle against the · vio
lence that permeates U.S. social structures is a
common thread binding African~American
women. · Anna Julia Cooper, an educated, nine
teenth-century Black woman intellectual, describes
Black women’s vulnerability to sexual violence:
Girls ofthe So\lth:-that large, bright, promising
fatally beautiful cla.ss .. ·• so· full of promise and
possibilities, yet so sure of destniction; .often
with9ut a father to. wh9I11 they <:lare !!pply the.lov
ing Jenn, . often without a stronger brother to
espou~e their cause and defend thekhortor with .
his iife's blood; in the midstofpitfallsartd snares,
waylaid by the lower'classes of white nien, with
no _shelter, rtb protection. (Cobper ~892, 240)
class U.S. Black women built a powerful club
movement and numerous . community orgahiza~
tions (Giddings 1984, 1988; Gilkes 1985).
not mean that all U.S. Black wonien share its
benefits or even recognize it. For example, for
protection from assaults. Far too many young
Black girls inhabit hazardous and hostile envi
ronments (Carroll 1997). In 1975 I received an
essay titled “My World” from Sandra, a sixth
grade student who was a resident of one of the
most dangerous public housing projects in
Boston. Sandra wrote, “My world is full of peo
ple getting rape. People shooting on another.
Kids and grownups fighting over girlsfriends.
And people without jobs who can’t afford to get
a education so they can get a job … winos on the
streets raping and killing little girls.” Her words
poignantly express a growing Black feminist
sensibility that she may be victimized by racism,
misogyny, and poverty. They. reveal her aware
ness that she is vulnerable to rape as· a form of
sexual violence. Despite her feelings about her
neighborhood, Sandra not only walked the streets
daily but managed safely to deliver three siblings
to school. In doing so she participated in a Black
women’s legacy of struggle. Sandra prevailed,
but at a cost. Unlike Sandra, others simply quit.
several core themes of a Black women’s stand
point. Efforts to reclaim U.S. Black women’s
intellectual traditions have revealed Black
women’s long-standing attention to additional
core themes first recorded by Maria W. Stewart
(Richardson 1987). Stewart’s perspective on
intersecting oppressions, her call for replacing
derogated images of Black womanhood with
self-defined images, her belief in Black women’s
activism as mothers, teachers, and Black com
munity · leaders, and her sensitivity to sexual
politics are all core themes advanced by a variety
of Black feminist intellectuals.
African-American women as a group, individual
Black women neither have identical experiences
nor interpret experi~nces in a similar fashion. The
existence of core themes does not mean that
African-American women respond to these themes
in the same way. Differences among individual
Black women produce different patterns of expe
riential knowledge that in turn shape individual
reactions to the core themes. For example, when
faced with controlling images of Black women as
being ugly and unfeminine, some women-such
as Sojourner Truth-demand, “Ain’t I a woman?”
dominant group, they challenge notions ofBarbie
doll femininity premised on middle-class White
women’s experiences (duCille 1996, 8-59). In
contrast, other women internalize the controlling
images and come to believe that they are the ste
reotypes (Brown-Collins and Sussewell 1986).
Still others aim to transgress the boundaries that
frame the images themselves. Jaminica, a 14-year- •••
old Black girl, describes her strategies: “Unless
you want to get into a big activist battle, you
accept the stereotypes given to you and just try
and reshape them along the way. So in a way, this
gives me a lot offreedom. I can’t be looked at any
worse in society than I already am-black and
female is pretty high on the list ofthings not to be”
(Carroll 1997, 94-95).
For example, although all African-American
women encounter institutionalized racism, social
class differences among African-American
women influence patterns of racism in.housing,
education, and employment. Middle-class Blacks
are more likely to encounter a pernicious form of
racism that has left many angry and disappointed
(Cose 1993; Feagin and Sikes 1994). A young
manager who graduated with honors from the
University of Maryland describes the specific
form racism can take for middle-class Blacks.
Before she flew to Cleveland to explain a mar
keting plan for her company, her manager made
her go over it three or four times in front of him
so that she would not forget her marketing plan.
Then he explained how to check luggage at an
airport and how to reclaim it. “I just sat at lunch
listening to this man talking to me like I was a
monkey who could remember but couldn’t
think,” she recalled.· When she had had enough,
“I asked him ifhe wanted to tie my money up in
a handkerchief and put a note on me saying that
I was an employee of this company. In case I got
lost I would be picked up by Traveler’s Aid, and
Traveler’s Aid would send me back” (Davis and
Watson 1985, 86). Most middle-class Black
women do not encounter such blatant incidents,
but many working-class Blacks do. Historically,
working-class Blacks have struggled with forms
of institutionalized racism directly organized by
White institutions and by forms mediated by
some segments of the Black middle class. Thus,
women, the 1
Blacks (Kel
Blackwome1
tive characte1
influences A
responses to 1
sion and the i
bic communi
of everyday e
1984; Clarke
1998; Williar
how being a
the wedding 1
I wish I hado
me and woul1
querading as
‘girl”‘ (1983,
attending the
Beverly Smit]
into a form •
varying ethni,
U.S. nation-s1
among Black
example, Bia<
that combines
ethnicity in di
women thus 1
experiences ti
holding a spe
and being etru
response to c1
to stress that
standpoint exi
typal Black w
normal, nonn
essentialist ur
standpoint su1
women in se
Instead, it ma
Black women
one characteri
different res]
Because it bot
rate heteroger
oppositional
standpoint es
.\vcifuen, the legacy of struggle by working~class
13\acks (Kelley 1994) and by working-class
Blackwomen in particular will express a distinc
‘Sexuality signals another important factor that
· uences African-American women’s varying
spolises to common challenges. Blacklesbians
fqn and the issues they face living in homopho~
iccomniunities as’.shaping their interpretations
£everyday eventS{Shockley 1974; Lorde 1982,
l9Q8; .Williams 1997). Beverly Smith describes
Jw :being a lesbian •affected herperceptions of
. !i\vedding ofone, of her closest friends: ‘~God,
”Yisb’Ihad One friend here. Someone who kpew
‘f.and would understand how I feel. I am mas
~~rading as a nice;,straight, middle-class Black
‘~1″‘{1983, 172)_’:While the majority of those
‘yerly Sniith felt that herfriend:was being sent
.p:a: form of bondage. In a·. similar fashion;
iS.’nation°state as; Well also ·shape. differences
~’iainple, Black Puerto Ricans constitute a group
h~tcoi:nbines categories ofrace,nationality,.and
‘tlrtiicity in distinctive ways. Black Puerto Rican
· foiien thus must negotiate . a distinctive set of
· p~riences that. accrue to being. racially Black,
idinga special form of American,citizenship,
;{krnal, normative, · and thereby authentic. An
JS~ntialistunderstailding of a Black woman’s
{~dpoint suppresses differences among. J3lack
lfstead, it may be tnore accurate to say that a
~tje i;:haracterized by the tensions that accrue to
•tl!ff~rent responses’ to common challenges.
‘ ,~.¢ause it both recognizes and aims to incorpo
:positional knowledge, this Black women s
arises within . and a:iins to :. articulate a Black
womens group standpoint regarding experiences
associated .with intersecting oppressions, stress
ing this group standpoint’s h!)terogeneous com-
position is significant: .. · . . . • , . …
a Black women’s standpointit is ~qually impor~
tant to recognize that U.B. Black women also
encounter:the same challenges (artd correspond
ingly different expressions) as women ofAfrican
descent· within, a Black.diasporic context. This
context in tum is situate<;! within· a transnatiorial,
global cont.ext. The term diaspora describes the
experiences· of people who, through Slavery, .
colonialism,· imperialistn, ahd migration, ·. have
been forced to leave· their native. lands '(Funani
1998,•417); ·For U:S..Black .women and othe.r
people ofAfrican descent, a diasporic framework
suggests · a dispersal· from Africa· to. societies in
the Caribbean, South America, North America,
and Europe. Understandings ofAfrican-American
womanhood thus reflect a distinctive pattem pf
dispersal associated with· forced immigration to
the United States·· arid· subsequent·· enslavement
(Pala 1995). Since a diasporic framework is not
normative, it should not be used to. assess the
authenticity ofpeople ofAfrican descent in refer
ence to an. assumed African norm, Rather; Black
diasporic frameworks .center analyses ofBlack
women within the context ofcommon challenges
experienced transnationally.
Blackwomen have developed certainly must be
understood in the context of U:Si. nation:.:state
politics; At the same time,U.S. Black feminism
as a social justice project shares l,lluch with com~
parable social justice projects advanced notonly
by other. U:S. racial/ethnic groups {see; e.g.,
Takaki •l 993); but by women ofAfrican descent
across quite diverse societies. In the context of
an “intercontinental.· Black·. women’s conscious
ness movement” (McLaughlin 1995, 73), women
ofAfrican descent are dispersed globally, yet the
issues we face may· be similar.. Transnationally,
women encounter recurring social issues such as
poverty, violence, reproductive concerns, lack of
education, sex work, and susceptibility to disease
(Rights of Women 1998). Placing African
American women’s experiences, thought, and
text reveals these and other commonalities of
women ofAfrican descent while specifying what
is particular to African-American women.
and Black Feminist Thought
nist thought concerns the connections between
U.S. Black women’s experiences as a heteroge
neous collectivity and any ensuing group knowl
edge or standpoint. …
Black women have generated alternative prac
tices and knowledges that have been designed to
foster U.S. Black women’s group empowerment.
In contrast to the dialectical relationship linking
oppression and activism, a dialogical relation
ship characterizes Black women’s collective
experiences and group knowledge. On both the
individual and the group level, a dialogical rela
tionship suggests that changes in thinking may be
accompanied by changed actions and that altered
experiences may in turn stimulate a changed con
sciousness. For U.S. Black women as a collectiv
ity, the struggle for a self-defined Black feminism
occurs through an ongoing dialogue whereby
action and thought inform one another.
logical relationship. On the one hand, there is
U.S. Black feminist practice that emerges in the
context oflived experience. When organized and
visible, such practice has taken the form of
overtly Black feminist social movements dedi
cated to the empowerment ofU.S. Black women.
Two especially prominent moments characterize
Black feminism’s visibility. Providing many of
the guiding ideas for today, the first occurred at
the turn of the century via the Black women’s
club movement. The second or modern Black
feminist movement was stimulated by the antira
cist and women’s social justice movements of
the 1960s and 1970s and continues to the pres
ent. However, these periods of overt political
activism where African-American women lob
bied in our own behalf remain unusual. They
appear to be unusual when juxtaposed to more
typical patterns of quiescence regarding Black
women’s advocacy.
Black feminist activism demonstrates distinctive
patterns. Because African-Americans have long
been relegated to racially segregated environ
ments, U.S. Black feminist practice has often
occurred within a context of Black community
development efforts and other Black nationalist
inspired projects. Black nationalism emerges in
conjunction with racial segregation-U.S. Blacks
living in a racially integrated society would most
likely see less need for Black nationalism. As a
political philosophy, Black nationalism is based
on the belief that Black people constitute a people
or “nation” with a common history and destiny.
Black solidarity, the belief that Blacks have com
mon interests and should support one another, has
long permeated Black women’s political philoso
phy. Thus, Black women’s path to a “feminist”
consciousness often occurs within the context of
antiracist social justice projects, many of them
influenced by Black nationalist ideologies. In
describing how this phenomenon affects Bl?ck
women in global context, Andree Nicola
McLaughlin contends, “[A]mong activist Black
women, it is generally recognized that nationalist
struggle provides a rich arena for developing a
woman’s consciousness” (McLaughlin 1995, 80).
To look for Black feminism by searching for U.S.
Black women who self-identify as ”Black femi
nists” misses the complexity ofhow Black feminist
practice actually operates (Collins 1993a) ….
thought encompasses bodies of knowledge and
sets of institutional practices that actively grap
ple with the central questions facing U.S. Black
women as a group. Such theory recognizes that
U.S. Black women constitute one group among
many that are differently placed within situations
of injustice. What makes critical social theory
“critical” is its commitment to justice, for one’s
own group and for other groups.
knowledge’s sake is not enough-Black feminist
thought must both be fa:d to Black women’s
lived experiences and aim to better those experi
ences in some fashion. When such thought is
sufficiently grounded in Black feminist practice,
it reflects this dialogical relationship. Black
feminist thought encompasses general knowl
edge that helps U.S. Black women survive in,
also includes mon
investigates the sp1
of any given perio
U.S. Black womer
among themes thi
thought and those t
everyday lives, it i
strength ofthis dial<
it is also reasonabl
that particular exi
thought. For exam1
theme within Blac1
women operated as
trol. During the J
worked primarily
countering the se:
domestic workers
Clear connections 1
content and purpos
and important issue
thought goes far
African-American ‘i
which it seeks to fi
can create collecti
American women al
women’s standpoir
rearticulation, Blac
African-American VI
By taking the core
standpoint and infm
Black feminist thou
sciousness that utifo
taken-for-granted kr
consciousness, Blac
rearticulates, and pre
in public a consciou
exists. More irnpo1
sciousness aims to
women and stimulat
nist thought concen
)q i111cludes more specialized · knowledge . that
Y}~ti~ates the specific themes and challenges
)apy given period of time. Conversely, when
·.,sY;Black won1en cannot see the connections
,b~g themes that penneate Biack ·• feminist
.~ght and those that influence Black w,omen’s
‘eyday•ltves;jt is appropri1:1.te to question the
igthofthis dialogical relationship. Moreover,
;f)particular . expression of Black feminist
‘Wht For example, during slavery, a special
·i,i’irwithin Black. feminist thought was how
\lri~titutionalized rape of enslaved Biack
t,}JSuri11g the period when Black.. women
‘,1,mftj:ring the sexual harnssment of live•in
···’istjc. workers gairied special· importance.
}ht and purpose ofBlack. feminist thought
.. ~ potential significance ofBlack . feminist
@t goes .. far beyond ·demonstrating that
6lin~American · women· can be theorists. Like
\feminist ·practice, which_.it i-eflects and
:)t seek,s to foster,. Black feminist thought
i:eate .collective· •identity. among· Africari
,;:¥i’s standpoin( Through: the process of
‘;ij?1ellation, .Black feminist . thought. can offer
}4r~/\tnericanwomen a different view ofour~
,i~ l’\fld our worlds (Omi and Winant 1994, 99).
}@dng the core themes of a Black women’s
,j p9itit and infusing them with newmeariing.
J#ess that utilizes Blackwomen’s· everyday,
‘+ior-granted knowledge. Rather than raising
\,:n1sriess, Black feminist thought · affirms,
‘. ,. ti1ates, and provides avehicle for expressing
ts1 .More important, this rearticulated con-
p: and stimulate resistance ….
,Jizack Woinen Intellectuals
]hbught concerns the essential contributions
existeri<;:e ofa :13lack. women's standpoint does
not. mean that .African-American wotnen, aca
demic or otherwise, appreciate its content, see its
significance, 6rrecognize.its potential as a cata~
lystfor social chm1ge'. One key taskfor Black
wonieri intellectuals· of .diverse ages, .social
classes, educational backgrounds, and occupa
tions consists·.· of asking the right questions. and
investiga,tirig all .dimensions of a. Black women's
standpoint with and for African-American
women. B:istoricaUy/Black'\\fotrien . intellectuals
stood in a. special relationship to the larger .COlll
ship that frallled Black feminist thought’s
contours as critic~! s0cial theory .. ; . . . . . .
intellectuals .to the commun1ty of i\frican
American women .parallels .. the existence of two
interrelated ,levels of knowledge (Berger and
Luckmann 1966)’. The. commonplace, taken-for
granted knowledge shared by African~Ainerican
women growing ftoin our everydaythoughts and
actions constitutes a ·first and most. fundamental
level ofknowledge. The ideas that Black women
share with· one another on an informal, daily
basis about topics such .as how to style our hair,
characteristics• of “good”· Black men, strategies
for dealing with White folks, and skills ofhow to
“get over”p:tovide the foundations for this taken
for-granted knowledge:
emerge from· a group produce a second, more
specialized type of knowledge. Whether work.:,
ing-class or micldle~class, educated ofnot, famous
or everyday, the range of:Black women iritellec.;
tuals discussed in Chapter 1 · are• examples· .of
these specialists. Tlieir thepri(;)s that facilitate the
expression ofa Black women’s standpoint form
the . ·specialized·.· knowledge.·· of·. Black ·. feminist
thought. The two types ofknowledge are interde
pendent. While Black feminist thought articuiates
the often taken-for-granted knowledge shated by
African-American women as a group, the con
sciousness of Black w0men may be transformed
by ~uch thought. Many Black women blues· sing
ers have long sung about taken-for~granted situa
tions that affect U.S. Black women.. Through
their music, they not only depict Black women’s
realities, they.aim to shape them.
to achieve literacy, middle-class Black women
have also had greater access to the resources to
engage in Black feminist scholarship. Education
need not mean alienation from this dialogical
relationship. The actions of educated Black
women within the Black women’s club move
ment typify this special relationship between one
segment of Black women intellectuals and the
wider community ofAfrican-American women:
like Frances Harper, Anna Julia Cooper, and Ida
B. Wells were not isolated figures of intellectual
genius; they were shaped by and helped to shape
a wider movement of Afro-American women.
This is not to claim that they were representative
of all black women; they and their counterparts
formed an educated, intellectual elite, but an
elite that tried to develop a cultural and historical
perspective that was organic to the wider condi
tion ofblack womanhood. ( Carby 1987, 115)
because it illustrates a tradition ofjoining schol
arship and activism. Because they often lived in
the same neighborhoods as working-class
Blacks, turn-of-the-century club women lived in
a Black civil society where this dialogical rela
tionship was easier to establish. They saw the
problems. They participated in social institutions
that encouraged solutions. They fostered the
development of a “cultural and historical per
spective that was organic to the wider condition
of black womanhood.” Contemporary Black
women intellectuals face similar challenges of
fostering dialogues, but do so under greatly
changed social conditions. Whereas racial segre
gation was designed to keep U.S. Blacks
oppressed, it fostered a form of racial solidarity
that flourished in all-Black neighborhoods. In
contrast, now that Blacks live in economically
heterogeneous neighborhoods, achieving the
same racial solidarity raises new challenges….
Dynamic and Changing
feminist thought concerns the significance of
change. In order for Blacls: feminist thought to
social justice project, both must remain dynamic.
Neither Black feminist thought as a critical
social theory nor Black feminist practice can be
static; as social conditions change, so must the
knowledge and practices designed to resist them.
For example, stressing the importance of Black
women’s centrality to Black feminist thought
does not mean that all African-American women
desire, are positioned, or are qualified to exert
this type of intellectual leadership. Under current
conditions, some Black women thinkers have
lost contact with Black feminist practice.
Conversely, the changed social conditions under
which U.S. Black women now come to woman
hood-class-segregated neighborhoods, some
integrated, far more not-place Black women of
different social classes in entirely new relation
ships with one another….
African-American women stimulate the need for
new Black feminist analyses of the common dif
ferences that characterize U.S. Black woman
hood. Some Black women thinkers are already
engaged in this process. Take, for example,
Barbara Omolade’s (1994) insightful analysis of
Black women’s historical and contemporary par
ticipation in mammy work. Most can understand
mammy work’s historical context, one where
Black women were confined to domestic service,
with Aunt Jemima created as a controlling image
designed to hide Black women’s exploitation.
Understanding the limitations of domestic ser
vice, much of Black women’s progress in the
labor market has been measured by the move out
of domestic service. Currently, few U.S. Black
women work in domestic service in private
homes. Instead, a good deal of this work in pri
vate homes is now done by undocumented immi
grant women of color who lack U.S. citizenship;
their exploitation resembles that long visited
upon African-American women (Chang 1994).
But, as Omolade points out, these changes do not
mean that U.S. Black women have escaped
mammy work. Even though few Aunt Jemimas
exist today, and those that do have been cosmeti
cally altered, leading to the impression that
mammy work has disappeared, Omo lade reminds
us that mammy work has assumed new forms.
Within each segment of the labor market-the
ing homes, day-ca
that characterize th
taries and clerical 1
and administrators
sector-U.S. Black
share of the emotio
after other people,
context the task for
thought lies in exr
tionships and deve
commonalities are
work overall has
Black women’s ir
the suppression oJ
meant that Black~
tionally relied on
tions to produce SJ
scholars, writers, 1
within African-At:
tions, the case fc
movement and in
incorporation of w
ricular offerings <
and universities, c
critical mass ofA:6
such as Toni Morr
Naylor within thes
that Black wome
employment with
history and Black
stitute two focal
Black women's ir
Moreover, U.S. 1
media remains uni
ess Oprah Win:6
show and forays i
and our ideas vii
tions has been in
facing African-A
working in thest
potential isolatio1
Black women’s c
access to other U
women’s commu
>mg hornes, day-care centers, and dry cleaners
that characterize the secondary sector, the secre~
fiefsector, or the teachers, social workers, nurses,
f)after other·• people, often ·for. lower• pay. In this
\context the task for contemporary Black feminist
\thought lies in explicating these changing rela
tionships and developing analyses of how these
·,;’.~; ;Jlie cha~ging .·· coriditic\11s of Blac~women’ s
/.Wor~ ~yern11 ·•has. itnPortanf implic:atfons .• for
iijiiick. ‘,Vbril.en’s•····intetlectual .”‘ork ·. Historically,
Jlj~·~9ppti~~1011. of Black feminist.· thought· has
\[i~tj~liff~iied cm.···alternative· institutional ·•loca-
;tigB~ to produce spe~iaHzed knowledge ab.out. a ·w:~ Wo~en’s standpoint. Many Black women
rik,J:s.wa~ thec~sewithMariaW. Stewart; or
iipn:S, th.e case for Black women in the club
·woyenie~t aml inBlackchurches. Tlie grudging
}~~µ1ar rjfferings of historically White colleges
•'[iid \1nhrersities, coupled with the creatfon of a
iSUtig~~pi~~s qfAfricart~j\rne11can \¥omen o/riters
,})¾pli ‘!!~ Jo11i Morrisoµ, Alice Walker, and Gloria
?N~r:lor,\vithin tlieseiµs#tlltion:al i()cations, ~~ans
… ·p19ynie11t within .acadenii~. B.lack wo111en’s
i~fofy ~IJ.dB1ack feminist.literary criticism·con
.fNfe ·«v :foc:al ·. Points . ()f this ·.. renaissance in
~ckwqrnen;s ·intellectual work (Carby1987).
pfetrvei, US. Black ·WOmenis. access to the
.~· ;ppl’a,li Willfrey’s ldng–ru~ing · television
},:\Jhe. yisibilify provided U.S.·Black wotnen
\~q .ci11r idells ivia, th~se. new institutional ·loca
lti1rls b.as been: immense., However;. one• danger
Ja,~irtg African”Alnerican wornen intellectuals
}t6rltjng •in .these.. ite\y locations .concerns the
Pqtep.tial ·isolation:·. of ip.dividuaf .thinkers from
~lack “‘7omen’s collective. experiences–cc’-lack of
. Cess to ·other U;S. Black women atid to Black
political activism-that typiclllly •. accompanies
training in standard .academic disciplines or par
ticipating in allegedly neutralspheres. like the
\’.fre~”.pres~. Yet another involves the inabiiity of
sonie !Jlackwpmen ”superstars” to critique the
terms of their own participation in these new
relations. Blinded bytheir self-proclatined Black
feminist diva aspirations, they feel that they owe
no one, especially other Black Wornen •. Instead,
they become trapped within their 6wri impover
ished Black feminist universes. Despite these
dangers,.these ,ne.w instittition,al)oci1dons.provide
a•iliufritude,of opporturiities .. f’or efihancingBiack
feministthoµglifsvfsibility. In tliisnew· qontext,
the chaHenge)ies in retnaining dynamic, an the
while keeping iii fr:lilid that a maying target is
more difficult to hit.. . . .. .
andOtherSocia!JusticeProjects ·
nist thought cone.ems J.ts relationship to.. · other
projects fof social justice. A broad range of
Africari~American · :w6mei1 · intellectuals have
advanced the view that :Black W?riieti’s struggles
are part ·bf a wider. stniggle•for•·hufuan dignify,
empowerment, and . social justice. ·1n an J89~
speech to · wofuen, Anna Julia Cooper cogently
expressed this worldview:
the oneness of life, and the U11llaturalness and
injustice ofaH. spt::cia~ favoritisms, wh~ther of
sex, race, country, or cb11dition. : … The colmed
wonian feels that woma~’s cause is one ii~d
Ull.iversal; ancl that: :·.·not H11 race, cofor, sex,
arid condition are seen as accidents; arid not .the
substance ofiife; riot till the universartitle Of
humanity to life, liberty, and the :Plirsliitofhap
piness is conceded to be inalie.nable fo all; not
till then is woman’s lesson taught and woman’s
cause won–‘–nof the white woman’s nor the
black woman’s, not the red woriian’s but the
cause of every man ‘arid of every woman Who
has writhed silently.· Ull.der a mighty Wrong.
(Loewenberg and Bogin 1976,330-:31)
9111eri’s .communities. Another is the pressure intellectuals embrace this perspective regardless
educational backgrounds, our fields of study, or nism is a recurring humanist vision (Steady
our historical periods. Whether we advocate work 1981, 1987) ….
ing through autonomous Black women’s organi Perhaps the most succinct version ofthe human
zations, becoming part of women’s organizations,
running for political office, or supporting Black
community institutions, African-American women
intellectuals repeatedly identify political actions
such as these as a means for human empower
ment rather than ends in and of themselves. Thus
by Fannie Lou Hamer, the daughter of sharecrop Ex
pers and a Mississippi civil rights activist. While
sitting on her porch, Ms. Hamer observed, “Ain’ CE no such thing as I can hate anybody and hope to
see God’s face” (Jordan 1981, xi).